Europe 1 with AFP 5:31 p.m., August 8, 2022

The Toulouse prosecutor's office indicated on Monday that nine graves in the Cagnac-les-Mines cemetery were opened, in vain, on July 20 to try to find the body of Delphine Jubillar, who disappeared at the end of 2020 in this small town in the Tarn.

Justice had decided on July 4 the continued detention of Cédric Jubillar, suspected of having killed his wife Delphine.

Nine graves in the Cagnac-les-Mines cemetery were opened in vain to try to find the body of Delphine Jubillar, who disappeared at the end of 2020 in this small town in the Tarn, we learned Monday from the Toulouse prosecutor's office.

On July 20, these graves where the investigators considered it possible that the body of the Tarn nurse had been placed were opened and examined, without result.

Cédric Jubillar still in detention

Justice had decided on July 4 the continued detention of Cédric Jubillar, suspected of having killed his wife Delphine.

In the absence of irrefutable evidence, the investigators put forward "a bundle of serious and concordant clues" against this 34-year-old plasterer painter.

The defense lawyers, who have requested the release of their client several times, consider on the contrary that the file is "empty" and that the investigation is being conducted only "in charge".

Cédric Jubillar had been indicted for intentional homicide in June 2021 and imprisoned, in solitary confinement, in the Seysses remand center, near Toulouse.

In December 2020, a few days before Christmas, France was moved by the disappearance of Delphine Jubillar, which occurred a few weeks after the conviction of Jonathann Daval for the murder of his wife, which he had long denied, playing the role of the grieving husband.

Subsequently, accusing glances, in particular from those around this 33-year-old nurse at the time of her disappearance, quickly fell on the husband, criticized for his consumption of cannabis, and for delaying in finishing the house in which he lived. the Jubillar family.